Hello, community of contemplatives. This is Michael Hawkins. I was active here until early 2012, and may have posted something here and there since then.
Jeffrey reached out to me to see where the hell I've gone. In our message exchange, I reflected on the fact that I logged over 10,000 hours on the cushion during the late 90's and early 00's, that I did regular long retreats, including with Jhanananda, and that I had found a home here with others who are struggling to walk a contemplative path in today's world.
For all the attainments I had gained "back in the day," I was not prepared for my personal crash and burn, which started in September of 2007 during an argument with my ex-wife. My ego cracked that day, and it just kept falling apart until, perhaps ten years ago, I contemplated suicide on a daily basis. I remember pacing back and forth in the unfinished basement of our rental house, out of my mind with a suffering that couldn't find the bottom. I just kept falling, falling, falling. Some part of me must not have wanted to die, because I reached out to an old therapist friend who, as it turned out, had retired from his therapy practice and was only interested in spiritual pursuits - mostly Advaita Vedanta, with a special love for Ramana Maharshi. We had weekly phone sessions, during which time I began to recover.
One of the main insights that came to me during this period was that I was suffering from shame. This is still very present in me today, as I write this to you, perhaps more so than in 2013. Anyone who has looked into the shame dynamic understands how vicious and insidious it is. Shame takes a regrettable action and turns it into self-condemnation. "I walked away from my meditation family, therefore I am a horrible person." "I abandoned my friends and loved ones, I am truly the lowliest of humans." "I am a fraud, I wouldn't wish me on my worst enemy." "I am unworthy." It's a downward cycle that is very, very difficult to deal with. It requires a lot of inner child work, a lot of emotional onion-peeling, a lot of trauma recovery work. As Jeffrey would say, it requires a lot of meditation into the fourth jhana - but I can't verify that, at least not at this moment.
The fact is, in the state that I'd arrived at, I couldn't carry on with my work here in the Great Western Vehicle. I also walked away from an astrology community that I'd built up over time. I walked away from a writing community that I'd been involved with since 1995. I walked away from every friend I have in the world. All my worst coping mechanisms sprang into action, and I made the same exact decisions to run away as I'd made in 1982, when I left home in the aftermath of a murder suicide that blew my world away.
I'm sharing all of this with you because I have no interest in rebuilding the ego I once relied upon to get by in life. I'm not interested in defending that asshole, or in gaining anyone's validation at the expense of integrity. I am, however, interested in coming in from the cold. I'm interested in communing with brothers and sisters who are working it out within the context of a contemplative practice, and who are willing to receive a Prodigal Son back into the family.
If you'll have me, I'd love to spend time with you here.